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The first posts using John Titor's military symbol appeared on the Time Travel Institute forums on November 2, 2000, under the username TimeTravel_0 [1] (The name "John Titor" was not used at that time.) The posts discussed time travel in general, the first one being the "six parts" description of the components required for a working time ...
Between 2000 and 2001, an online bulletin board user self-identified as John Titor became popular as he claimed to be a time traveler from 2036 on a military mission. Holding the many-worlds interpretation as correct and consequently every time travel paradox as impossible, he stated that many events which occurred up to his time would indeed ...
A Tipler cylinder, also called a Tipler time machine, is a hypothetical object theorized to be a potential mode of time travel—although results have shown that a Tipler cylinder could only allow time travel if its length were infinite or with the existence of negative energy.
John Titor did not come back for a year 2038 bug fix. John Titor 15 November 2000 14:41: I was "sent" to get an IBM computer system called the 5100. It was one the first portable computers made and it has the ability to read the older IBM programming langages in addition to APL and Basic.
The story has been cited as evidence for various theories and assumptions about the topic of time travel. In 2000, after the Spanish magazine Más Allá published (Issue No. 138; August 2000; Pages 76-81) a representation of the events as a factual report, folklore researcher Chris Aubeck investigated the description to check its veracity.
The John Titor story, and particularly Steins;Gate which makes use of it, are very significant in how people view the IBM 5100. It's not just trivia. VDZ 19:15, 9 June 2019 (UTC) Looking at what links to this page, 4 out of the 34 links are related to the John Titor legend (and two specifically related to Steins;Gate). It makes sense to include ...
"John Titor is the name used on several bulletin boards during 2000 and 2001 by a poster" The article begins with what is likely an unintentionally false statement. "John Titor" is the name that the s/he used on but one BBS - the Art Bell "Post-2-Post" (P2P) (www.artbell.com now defunct) forum starting in January of 2001 until March of 2001.
Time Machine is an American game show where contestants compete to answer trivia questions about popular culture and recent history to win prizes. The show aired on NBC from January 7 through April 26, 1985, and was hosted by John Davidson. [1] Charlie Tuna was the announcer, with Rich Jeffries as his substitute.